Key Performance Indicators (KPI) 

>From F. John Reh

How an organization defines and measures progress toward its goals
Key Performance Indicators, also known as KPI or Key Success Indicators (KSI), 
help an organization define and measure progress toward organizational goals. 

Once an organization has analyzed its mission, identified all its stakeholders, 
and defined its goals, it needs a way to measure progress toward those goals. 
Key Performance Indicators are those measurements. 

What Are Key Performance Indicators (KPI)
Key Performance Indicators are quantifiable measurements, agreed to beforehand, 
that reflect the critical success factors of an organization. They will differ 
depending on the organization. A business may have as one of its Key 
Performance Indicators the percentage of its income that comes from return 
customers. A school may focus its Key Performance Indicators on graduation 
rates of its students. A Customer Service Department may have as one of its Key 
Performance Indicators, in line with overall company KPIs, percentage of 
customer calls answered in the first minute. A Key Performance Indicators for a 
social service organization might be number of clients assisted during the 
year. 

Whatever Key Performance Indicators are selected, they must reflect the 
organization's goals, they must be key to its success,and they must be 
quantifiable (measurable). Key Performance Indicators usually are long-term 
considerations. The definition of what they are and how they are measured do 
not change often. The goals for a particular Key Performance Indicator may 
change as the organizations goals change, or as it get closer to achieving a 
goal. 

Key Performance Indicators Reflect The Organizational Goals
An organization that has as one of its goals "to be the most profitable company 
in our industry" will have Key Performance Indicators that measure profit and 
related fiscal measures. "Pre-tax Profit" and "Shareholder Equity" will be 
among them. However, "Percent of Profit Contributed to Community Causes" 
probably will not be one of its Key Performance Indicators. On the other hand, 
a school is not concerned with making a profit, so its Key Performance 
Indicators will be different. KPIs like "Graduation Rate" and "Success In 
Finding Employment After Graduation", though different, accurately reflect the 
schools mission and goals. 

Key Performance Indicators Must Be Quantifiable
If a Key Performance Indicator is going to be of any value, there must be a way 
to accurately define and measure it. "Generate More Repeat Customers" is 
useless as a KPI without some way to distinguish between new and repeat 
customers. "Be The Most Popular Company" won't work as a KPI because there is 
no way to measure the company's popularity or compare it to others. 

It is also important to define the Key Performance Indicators and stay with the 
same definition from year to year. For a KPI of "Increase Sales", you need to 
address considerations like whether to measure by units sold or by dollar value 
of sales. Will returns be deducted from sales in the month of the sale or the 
month of the return? Will sales be recorded for the KPI at list price or at the 
actual sales price? 

You also need to set targets for each Key Performance Indicator. A company goal 
to be the employer of choice might include a KPI of "Turnover Rate". After the 
Key Performance Indicator has been defined as "the number of voluntary 
resignations and terminations for performance, divided by the total number of 
employees at the beginning of the period" and a way to measure it has been set 
up by collecting the information in an HRIS, the target has to be established. 
"Reduce turnover by five percent per year" is a clear target that everyone will 
understand and be able to take specific action to accomplish. 
Key Performance Indicators Must be Key To Organizational SuccessMany things are 
measurable. That does not make them key to the organization's success. In 
selecting Key Performance Indicators, it is critical to limit them to those 
factors that are essential to the organization reaching its goals. It is also 
important to keep the number of Key Performance Indicators small just to keep 
everyone's attention focused on achieving the same KPIs. 

That is not to say, for instance, that a company will have only three or four 
total KPIs in the company. Rather there will be three or four Key Performance 
Indicators for the company and all the units within it will have three, four, 
or five KPIs that support the overall company goals and can be "rolled up" into 
them. 

If a company Key Performance Indicator is "Increased Customer Satisfaction", 
that KPI will be focused differently in different departments. 
The Manufacturing Department may have a KPI of "Number of Units Rejected by 
Quality Inspection", while the Sales Department has a KPI of "Minutes A 
Customer Is On Hold Before A Sales Rep Answers". Success by the Sales and 
Manufacturing Departments in meeting their respective departmental Key 
Performance Indicators will help the company meet its overall KPI. 

Good Key Performance Indicators vs. Bad
Bad: 

Title of KPI: Increase Sales
Defined: Change in Sales volume from month to month
Measured: Total of Sales By Region for all region
Target: Increase each month 
What's missing? 
Does this measure increases in sales volume by dollars or units? If by dollars, 
does it measure list price or sales price? Are returns considered and if so do 
the appear as an adjustment to the KPI for the month of the sale or are they 
counted in the month the return happens? How do we make sure each sales 
office's volume numbers are counted in one region, i.e. that none are skipped 
or double counted? How much, by percentage or dollars or units, do we want to 
increase sales volumes each month?(Note: Some of these questions may be 
answered by standard company procedures.) 

Good:
Title of KPI: Employee Turnover
Defined: The total of the number of employees who resign for whatever reason, 
plus the number of employees terminated for performance reasons, and that total 
divided by the number of employees at the beginning of the year. Employees lost 
due to Reductions in Force (RIF) will not be included in this calculation. 

Measured: The HRIS contains records of each employee. The separation section 
lists reason and date of separation for each employee. Monthly, or when 
requested by the SVP, the HRIS group will query the database and provide 
Department Heads with Turnover Reports. HRIS will post graphs of each report on 
the Intranet. 

Target: Reduce Employee Turnover by 5% per year.

What Do I Do With Key Performance Indicators?Once you have good Key Performance 
Indicators defined, ones that reflect your organization's goals, one that you 
can measure, what do you do with them? You use Key Performance Indicators as a 
performance management tool, but also as a carrot. KPIs give everyone in the 
organization a clear picture of what is important, of what they need to make 
happen. You use that to manage performance. You make sure that everything the 
people in your organization do is focused on meeting or exceeding those Key 
Performance Indicators. You also use the KPIs as a carrot. Post the KPIs 
everywhere: in the lunch room, on the walls of every conference room, on the 
company intranet, even on the company web site for some of them. Show what the 
target for each KPI is and show the progress toward that target for each of 
them. People will be motivated to reach those KPI targets. 

Read More : http://hrfiles.blogspot.com

 Archive

  a.. ? 2007 (62) 
    a.. ? April (62) 
      a.. Key Performance Indicators (KPI)
      b.. Human Resource Planning: an Introduction
      c.. Human Resources Management
      d.. On The Line: Our "Dead" Strategic Plan
      e.. Management File - What IS The Point Of Performance...
      f.. Why Improving Performance Management Systems Is So...
      g.. Success File - Fast Track To Promotion & Recogniti...
      h.. A Quick Guide To Employee Orientation - Help For ...
      i.. From The Corporate File - The Role Of Human Resour...
      j.. HRM - Measurement and Assessment Problems
      k.. HRM policies and their consequences
      l.. The Harvard Map of HRM
      m.. Cross training makes a strapping staff
      n.. Making the most of psychometrics
      o.. The Top Ten Managerial Competencies
      p.. 7 Secrets for Hiring Success
      q.. How to Hire The Million Dollar Salesperson
      r.. 360 Degree Feedback: Mistakes Managers Make and Ho...
      s.. Screening versus Testing; A Bottom Line Process fo...
      t.. Smart actions for your Appraisal Discussions
      u.. HRD: Not Everyone's Cup of Tea
      v.. Stress Management -Strategy & Techniques
      w.. A Checklist For Preventing Human Resources Problem...
      x.. Employee Handbooks - Protecting A Valuable Company...
      y.. The Role of the Trainer
      z.. The miracle of learning
      aa.. The Psychology of Expertise
      ab.. Knowledge Management
      ac.. eHR and Web-based HR Systems - Part 2
      ad.. eHR and Web-based HR Systems
      ae.. HR Systems Still Disappointing
      af.. Rescinding A Resignation
      ag.. HR Practice Tip: Reduce the Pain of Performance Ev...
      ah.. Exit Interviews: Constructive Feedback, Smoother T...
      ai.. From War of the Worlds to Group Hug:
      aj.. The Ultimate Retention-Reward System
      ak.. Taking on the Competition with Core Competencies
      al.. Change Is Not About How, It's About Who
      am.. Attracting and Retaining Top Talent - The Key To C...
      an.. HR Practice Tip: Reduce the Pain of Performance Ev...
      ao.. Challenges for HR Professionals in the Knowledge I...
      ap.. HR as Product: Be the Brand of Choice!
      aq.. Strategic Human Resource Management
      ar.. Coaching Helps Enhance Personal Performance
      as.. Employee Exit Surveys
      at.. Questions to Determine ROI for Your Company
      au.. Interview Questions, the Recruiters Guide
      av.. Employee Retirement Income Security Act
      aw.. 5 Tips on Conducting a Job Interview
      ax.. Job Interview Success Secrets: Stand Out from the ...
      ay.. How to Make Recruitment Agencies Work for You
      az.. Becoming a Human Resource Professional
      ba.. Pay Structure
      bb.. Career Planning Systems
      bc.. Interview Tips And Skills
      bd.. How To Ask The Right Questions in an Interview
      be.. Audit Planning Jobs
      bf.. Six Steps to a Fulfilling Career
      bg.. Pre-employment Screening Services And Their Advant...
      bh.. Honesty and Integrity in Your New Hire - and How t...
      bi.. The Secret Revealed Behind Tricks That Interviewer...
      bj.. Pre Employment Evaluation
      bk.. Read More : http://hrfiles.blogspot.com


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



********************
Situs untuk Jual Beli Barang
untuk keluar dari mailing list ini silahkan kirim email kosong ke:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kolom/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kolom/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Kirim email ke